An open letter to Bernie Sanders about Hugo Chavez

by Jonathan Nack

Sent via U.S. mail and email

Dear Sen. Bernie Sanders,

I am shocked and I denounce your description of the late president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, as a “dead communist dictator.” I expect better from you, but perhaps I need to re-evaluate such expectations.

I’m a longtime supporter going back to the days when you were running for re-election as mayor of Burlington, even though I live in Oakland, California. I’ve made a modest financial contribution to your current campaign and expressed support for your call to build a grassroots movement to take on the power of the billionaires and their corporations – what you’ve referred to as a “political revolution.”

You’ve said that this is what your campaign is about. It was precisely such a stance that got Hugo Chavez elected and re-elected president of Venezuela.

Bernie-Sanders-web-300x200, An open letter to Bernie Sanders about Hugo Chavez, News & Views
Bernie Sanders

President Chavez was neither a communist nor a dictator. If you don’t know that, you should.

Your use of the term “communist dictator” is code designed to pander to those who favor and justify U.S. intervention in Latin America and the Caribbean and around the world. U.S. intervention in the politics of other countries, including bloody military interventions, is an absolute disgrace.

It has resulted in the needless suffering and death of millions. It resulted in the imposition and maintenance of real military dictatorships throughout Latin Americas and much of the world. Most of these military dictatorships have only been overcome by democratic movements in the last 25 years.

It is the shameful history of U.S. intervention and how it is driven by the interests of billionaires and their corporations that you need to address, not denunciations of those who rise to leadership in their countries because of their opposition to it.

I’m not going to get into a detailed defense of President Chavez. It is sufficient to say that it is a fact that Hugo Chavez was elected and re-elected president of Venezuela in what international observers, including former President Jimmy Carter, have described as basically free and fair elections. No dictator holds such elections. It is sufficient to say that Pres. Chavez identified himself as a socialist and specifically said that he was not a communist.

President Chavez was neither a communist nor a dictator. If you don’t know that, you should.

I do not rise to defend President Chavez against all criticism. All politicians and political leaders deserve to be criticized for the bad things they say and do, as well as praise for the good, including you.

I am a socialist and a supporter of the Green Party. I stand for social justice, the protection of our environment and for real democracy. My donation to your campaign and the good things I’ve said and written about you are expressions of my support. This open letter is an expression of my criticisms.

Women-reach-out-to-Hugo-Chavez-2009-by-Prensa-PSUV-EPA-300x180, An open letter to Bernie Sanders about Hugo Chavez, News & Views
Women reach out to Hugo Chavez, a true man of the people, in this 2009 photo. – Photo: Prensa PSUV, EPA

I have defended you against charges that you are not really a socialist, pointing out the fact that there are many types of socialists. Even though I am a more radical socialist than you, I think you have a right to label your politics and that right should be respected, as long as it is within reason. The legacy of President Chavez also deserves that respect.

In general, I think you have failed to articulate foreign policy positions that distinguish you from those of Hillary Clinton, President Barack Obama or the leadership of the Democratic Party, all of whom are true advocates and instruments of the foreign policies driven by the interests of the billionaires and their corporations – in other words, U.S. imperialism.

How is it that you attack the billionaires’ control of domestic policies but not the interventionist and militarist foreign policies which they also control? How is it that you oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership but not other imperialist policies?

My parents taught me to be a critical thinker. Specifically, they taught me to pay attention to what politicians say, but also be aware that they often make promises that they have no intention nor ability to keep. They also taught me to never expect that politicians will do better than what they say they’ll do.

I think you have a right to label your politics and that right should be respected, as long as it is within reason. The legacy of President Chavez also deserves that respect.

With those lessons in mind, I will continue to praise and respond to your call to build a grassroots political movement to take power away from the billionaires and their corporations, but I have to denounce your support of U.S. imperialism, its wars, both overt and covert, the military industrial complex, the so called “Homeland Security” apparatus, and all interventions in the political affairs of other countries. These foreign policies are driven by the interests of the billionaires and their corporations, not the interests of our people, nor the people of the world.

Sincerely yours,

Jonathan Nack

Oakland, California

Here is the text of Bernie Sanders’ fundraising email:

“I don’t have a Super PAC, Jonathan. I am not going to travel around the country begging millionaires and billionaires for money. That’s just not going to happen.

“But the success of our campaign certainly has the billionaires’ attention.

“Yesterday, one of Hillary Clinton’s most prominent Super PACs attacked our campaign pretty viciously. They suggested I’d be friendly with Middle East terrorist organizations, and even tried to link me to a dead communist dictator.

“It was the kind of onslaught I expected to see from the Koch Brothers or Sheldon Adelson, and it’s the second time a billionaire Super PAC has tried to stop the momentum of the political revolution we’re building together.

“They’ll keep trying … unless we make them pay a price for their attacks.

Make the Super PACs pay for attacking us by making a $100 contribution to our campaign today. Let’s send a powerful message that we have had ENOUGH of the billionaire class buying elections.

“If we stand together to fight back against these ugly attacks, we can ensure this election is about who has the best ideas, and not who has the biggest donors.

“They should not underestimate us.

“Bernie Sanders”

Jonathan Nack, an Oakland-based journalist and activist, can be reached at jnack@igc.org.